Brief Overview 1

Column

In this session, we will use the Black Friday Data available in Kaggle to study how to make the following graphical displays.

Column

Graphical Displays

  • Categorical Data
    • Bar Chart
    • Pie Chart
  • Quantitative data
    • Histogram
    • Boxplot
    • Scatterplot
    • Line

Common Arguments

Here is a list of common arguments:

  • col: a vector of colors
  • main: title for the plot
  • xlim or ylim: limits for the x or y axis
  • xlab or ylab: a label for the x axis
  • font: font used for text, 1=plain; 2=bold; 3=italic, 4=bold italic
  • font.axis: font used for axis
  • cex.axis: font size for x and y axes
  • font.lab: font for x and y labels
  • cex.lab: font size for x and y labels

Brief Overview 2

Row

In this session, we will use the Black Friday Data available in Kaggle to study how to make the following graphical displays.

Row

Grphical Displays

  • Categorical Data
    • Bar Chart
    • Pie Chart
  • Quantitative Data
    • Histogram
    • Boxplot
    • Scatterplot
    • Line

Common Arguments

Here is a list of common arguments:

  • col: a vector of colors
  • main: title for the plot
  • xlim or ylim: limits for the x or y axis
  • xlab or ylab: a label for the x axis
  • font: font used for text, 1=plain; 2=bold; 3=italic, 4=bold italic
  • font.axis: font used for axis
  • cex.axis: font size for x and y axes
  • font.lab: font for x and y labels
  • cex.lab: font size for x and y label

Data

Column

First 500 Observations

Column

Description

In order to understand the customer purchases behavior against various products of different categories, the retail company “ABC Private Limited”, in United Kingdom, shared purchase summary of various customers for selected high volume products from last month. The data contain the following variables.

  • User_ID: User ID
  • Product_ID: Product ID
  • Gender: Sex of User
  • Age: Age in bins
  • Occupation: Occupation (Masked)
  • City_Category: Category of the City (A,B,C)
  • Stay_In_Current_City_Years: Number of years stay in current city
  • Marital_Status: Marital Status
  • Product_Category_1: Product Category (Masked)
  • Product_Category_2: Product may belongs to other category also (Masked)
  • Product_Category_3: Product may belongs to other category also (Masked)
  • Purchase: Purchase Amount
Rows: 550,068
Columns: 12
$ User_ID                    <dbl> 1000001, 1000001, 1000001, 1000001, 1000002…
$ Product_ID                 <chr> "P00069042", "P00248942", "P00087842", "P00…
$ Gender                     <chr> "F", "F", "F", "F", "M", "M", "M", "M", "M"…
$ Age                        <chr> "0-17", "0-17", "0-17", "0-17", "55+", "26-…
$ Occupation                 <dbl> 10, 10, 10, 10, 16, 15, 7, 7, 7, 20, 20, 20…
$ City_Category              <chr> "A", "A", "A", "A", "C", "A", "B", "B", "B"…
$ Stay_In_Current_City_Years <chr> "2", "2", "2", "2", "4+", "3", "2", "2", "2…
$ Marital_Status             <dbl> 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0…
$ Product_Category_1         <dbl> 3, 1, 12, 12, 8, 1, 1, 1, 1, 8, 5, 8, 8, 1,…
$ Product_Category_2         <dbl> NA, 6, NA, 14, NA, 2, 8, 15, 16, NA, 11, NA…
$ Product_Category_3         <dbl> NA, 14, NA, NA, NA, NA, 17, NA, NA, NA, NA,…
$ Purchase                   <dbl> 8370, 15200, 1422, 1057, 7969, 15227, 19215…

Bar Chart

Row

Bar chart is a graphical display good for the general audience. Here, we study the distribution of Age Group of the company’s customers who purchased their products on Black Friday.

Usage: barplot(height, …)

A bar chart can be horizontal or vertical. Using the argument col, we can assign a color for bars. The argument main could be used to change the title of the figure. We can use RGB color code to assign colors.

Note: The margin of a figure could be set using the par() function. The order of the setting is c(bottom, left, top, right).

Analysis

Row

Vertical Bar Chart

Horizontal Bar Chart

Pie Chart

Column

Similarly, we can use pie chart to study the distribution of the city category.

Usage: pie(height, …)

Tip: Use color palette to choose colors (Google search: color scheme generator).

Analysis

Column

Distribution of City Category

Histogram

Column

Histogram is used when we want to study the distribution of a quantitative variable. Here we study the distribution of customer purchase amount.

Usage: hist(x, …)

Column

Analysis

Boxplot

Column

Boxplot 1

Here, we talk about another graphical display that can be used to study the distribution of a quantitative variable: box and whisker plot (boxplot).

Usage: boxplot(x, …) or boxplot(formula, …)

B1

Boxplot 2

In general, a boxplot is used When we want to compare the distributions of several quantitative variables. In the following we study the distribution of customer purchase amount among different age groups.

B2

Column

Analysis of Boxplot 1

Analysis of Boxplot 2

Scatterplot

Column

When we want to study the relationship of two quantitative variables, a scatterplot can be used. Since this data set doesn’t have another quantitative variable, we will use the built-in data mtcars in R. Then we study the relationship of miles per gallon against the weight of vehicles.

Column

Analysis

Line Plot

Column

Data

Since the Black Friday Data are not time series data, it is not appropriate to use a line plot. In the following code chunk, we create a data frame using the forecasted highest temperatures from July 13 to July 22 in 2022 The Weather Channel

Analysis

Column

Line Chart

---
title: "Basic Graphical Displays"
output: 
  flexdashboard::flex_dashboard:
    theme:
      version: 4
      bootswatch: default
      navbar-bg: "green"
    orientation: columns
    vertical_layout: fill
    source_code: embed
---

```{r setup, include=FALSE}
library(flexdashboard)
library(tidyverse)
library(DT)
library(plotly)
Friday<-read_csv("C:/Users/ngles/OneDrive/Documents/School/MTH 209/In class labs/Black_Friday.csv")
```
Brief Overview 1
===

Column {data-width=450}
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

In this session, we will use the Black Friday Data available in [Kaggle](https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/pranavuikey/black-friday-sales-eda) to study how to make the following graphical displays.

Column {.tabset data-width=550}
---

### Graphical Displays

- Categorical Data
  - Bar Chart
  - Pie Chart

- Quantitative data
  - Histogram
  - Boxplot
  - Scatterplot
  - Line
  
### Common Arguments

Here is a list of common arguments:

  - col: a vector of colors
  - main: title for the plot
  - xlim or ylim: limits for the x or y axis
  - xlab or ylab: a label for the x axis
  - font: font used for text, 1=plain; 2=bold; 3=italic, 4=bold italic
  - font.axis: font used for axis
  - cex.axis: font size for x and y axes
  - font.lab: font for x and y labels
  - cex.lab: font size for x and y labels
  
Brief Overview 2 {data-orientation=rows}  
===

Row {data-height=100}
---

In this session, we will use the Black Friday Data available in [Kaggle](https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/pranavuikey/black-friday-sales-eda) to study how to make the following graphical displays.

Row {data-height=900}
---
### Grphical Displays

- Categorical Data
  - Bar Chart
  - Pie Chart
  
- Quantitative Data
  - Histogram
  - Boxplot
  - Scatterplot
  - Line
  
### Common Arguments

Here is a list of common arguments:

  - col: a vector of colors
  - main: title for the plot
  - xlim or ylim: limits for the x or y axis
  - xlab or ylab: a label for the x axis
  - font: font used for text, 1=plain; 2=bold; 3=italic, 4=bold italic
  - font.axis: font used for axis
  - cex.axis: font size for x and y axes
  - font.lab: font for x and y labels
  - cex.lab: font size for x and y label
  
Data
===

Column {data-width=550}
---

### <b><font size = 4><span Style = "color:blue">First 500 Observations</span></font></b>

```{r show_table}
datatable (Friday[1:500,], rownames=FALSE, colnames=c("User ID", "Product ID", "Gender", "Age", "Occupation", "City Category", "Stay In Current City Years", "Marital Status", "Product Category 1", "Product Category 2", "Product Category 3", "Purchase"), options=list(pagelength=20))
```

Column {data-width=450}
---

### <font size= 4><span Style ="color:red">Description</span></font>

In order to understand the customer purchases behavior against various products of different categories, the retail company “ABC Private Limited”, in United Kingdom, shared purchase summary of various customers for selected high volume products from last month. The data contain the following variables.

- User_ID: User ID
- Product_ID: Product ID
- Gender: Sex of User
- Age: Age in bins
- Occupation: Occupation (Masked)
- City_Category: Category of the City (A,B,C)
- Stay_In_Current_City_Years: Number of years stay in current city
- Marital_Status: Marital Status
- Product_Category_1: Product Category (Masked)
- Product_Category_2: Product may belongs to other category also (Masked)
- Product_Category_3: Product may belongs to other category also (Masked)
- Purchase: Purchase Amount

```{r}
glimpse(Friday)
```

Bar Chart {data-orientation=rows}
===

Row {data-height=350}
---

###

Bar chart is a graphical display good for the general audience. Here, we study the distribution of Age Group of the company’s customers who purchased their products on Black Friday.

**Usage:** barplot(height, …)

A bar chart can be horizontal or vertical. Using the argument <span Style="color:orange">col</span>, we can assign a color for bars. The argument <span Style="color:orange">main</span> could be used to change the title of the figure. We can use RGB color code to assign colors.

**Note:** The margin of a figure could be set using the <span Style="color:blue">par()</span> function. The order of the setting is <span Style="color:orange">c(bottom, left, top, right)</span>.

### Analysis

Row {data-height=650}
---

### **Vertical Bar Chart**
```{r bar1}
par(mpg=c(4,1,0))
par(mar=c(5,7,4,2))
barplot(table(Friday$Age), col ="lightblue", main = "Distribution of Purchases by Customer's Age", ylab= "Number of Purchases", xlab="Age Group")
```

### **Horizontal Bar Chart**
```{r bar2}
par(mpg=c(4,1,0))
par(mar=c(5,7,4,2))
Friday%>%
  ggplot(aes(x=Age))+geom_bar(fill="#69b3a2")+coord_flip()+labs(title = "Distribution of Purchases by Customer's Age", x = "Age Groups", y= "Number of Purchases")->bar1
ggplotly(bar1)
```

Pie Chart
===

Column {data-width=500}
---

Similarly, we can use pie chart to study the distribution of the city category.

**Usage:** pie(height, ...)

**Tip:** Use color palette to choose colors (Google search: color scheme generator).

### Analysis

Column {data-width=500}
---

### Distribution of City Category
```{r pie}
H<- table(Friday$City_Category)
percent<- round(100*H/sum(H), 1)
pie_labels<- paste(percent, "%", sep="")
pie(H, main="Distribution of City Category", labels=pie_labels, col=c("#54d2d2", "#ffcb00", "#f8aa4b"))
legend("topright", c("A","B","C"), cex=0.8, fill=c("#54d2d2", "#ffcb00", "#f8aa4b"))
```

Histogram
===

Column {data-width=500}
---

###

Histogram is used when we want to study the distribution of a quantitative variable. Here we study the distribution of customer purchase amount.

**Usage:** hist(x, …)

```{r histogram}
Friday%>% ggplot(aes(x=Purchase))+
  geom_histogram(fill="blue")+
  labs(title="Distribution of Customer Purchase Amount", x="Purchase Amount (British Pounds)")
```

Column {data-width=500}
---

### Analysis


Boxplot
===

Column {.tabset data-width=550}
---

### Boxplot 1

Here, we talk about another graphical display that can be used to study the distribution of a quantitative variable: box and whisker plot (boxplot).

**Usage:** boxplot(x, …) or boxplot(formula, …)



#### B1

```{r boxplot1}
boxplot(Friday$Purchase, xlab="Purchase Amount", ylab="British Pounds")
```


### Boxplot 2

In general, a boxplot is used When we want to compare the distributions of several quantitative variables. In the following we study the distribution of customer purchase amount among different age groups.

#### B2

```{r boxplot2}
boxplot(Purchase ~ Gender+Marital_Status, data=Friday, main="Distribution of Purchase by Sex and Marital Status", xlab="Sex and Marital Status", ylab="Purchase", cex.lab=.75, cex.axis=.5, names=c("Female and Single", "Male and Single", "Female and Married", "Male and Married"))
```


Column {data-width=450}
---

### Analysis of Boxplot 1

### Analysis of Boxplot 2


Scatterplot
===

Column {data-width=500}
---

###

When we want to study the relationship of two quantitative variables, a scatterplot can be used. Since this data set doesn’t have another quantitative variable, we will use the built-in data <span class="orange">mtcars</span> in R. Then we study the relationship of miles per gallon against the weight of vehicles.

```{r scatterplot}
plot(mpg ~ wt, data=mtcars, 
     xlab="Weight (1000 lbs)", ylab="Miles Per Gallon", pch= 19, col="blue")
```

Column {data-width=500}
---

### Analysis

Line Plot
===

Column {.tabset data-width=350}
---

### Data
Since the Black Friday Data are not time series data, it is not appropriate to use a line plot. In the following code chunk, we create a data frame using the forecasted highest temperatures from July 13 to July 22 in 2022 [The Weather Channel](https://weather.com/)

```{r data}
Date<- 13:22
Dayton_OH<-c(84,86,91,89,89,91,92,91,91,91)
Houston_TX<-c(100,97,96,94,94,94,93,93,92,91)
Denver_CO<-c(95,85,89,96,97,96,92,91,95,96)
Fargo_ND<-c(86,80,84,87,90,87,83,84,87,89)
df <- data.frame(Date, Dayton_OH, Houston_TX, Denver_CO, Fargo_ND)
datatable(df, rownames=FALSE, colnames=c("Date", "Dayton, OH", "Houston, TX", "Denver, CO", "Fargo, ND"))
```

### Analysis

Column {data-width=650}
---

### Line Chart

```{r line1}
plot(Date, Dayton_OH, type="o", col="blue", xlab="Date in July", ylab="Highest Temperature", ylim=c(80,100))
lines(Date, Houston_TX, type="o", col="red")
lines(Date, Denver_CO, type="o", col="purple")
lines(Date, Fargo_ND, type="o", col="darkgreen")

legend("topright", legend= c("Dayton, OH", "Houston, TX", "Denver, CO", "Fargo, ND"), col=c("blue", "red", "purple", "darkgreen"), lty=1, pch=1)
```